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> My first thought seeing this was that it validates that new apps from now on will be LLM-integrated from the start. Why not, right? LLMs used right are a great UX-improvement for almost any app.

Well, any apps that you can actually build yourself. This excludes the vast majority of them.




Hard to predict the future, but my guess is that most apps will have a natural language input component going forward. Why navigate a million menus or compose complex rulesets by hand when you can describe in natural language what you want the app to do. I'm working on making such use-cases become reality in a tech company, for all our products and apps, and it would be strange if other companies aren't thinking the exact same thing right now.


> Why navigate a million menus or compose complex rulesets by hand when you can describe in natural language what you want the app to do.

I dunno, I don't really have an urge to talk to my computer for most tasks. There's already language built-in to the computer that's just as natural to me as English is.

But regardless, more likely we'll just get something that's "good enough" and we'll be stuck with it regardless of actual demand—that seems to be how industry works.




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